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Lenny chatbot: new section
People using fatigue techniques to combat scammers.
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Can someone add a section about [https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/d3b7na/the-story-of-lenny-the-internets-favorite-telemarketing-troll this]? Thanks! --[[User:NaBUru38|NaBUru38]] ([[User talk:NaBUru38|talk]]) 18:20, 23 November 2018 (UTC)
Can someone add a section about [https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/d3b7na/the-story-of-lenny-the-internets-favorite-telemarketing-troll this]? Thanks! --[[User:NaBUru38|NaBUru38]] ([[User talk:NaBUru38|talk]]) 18:20, 23 November 2018 (UTC)

Another good way is to use fatigue techniques. If as many people as possible, try to get a human. Hit the digits or press 0. Try to sound interested and make up a fake name and fake info. Do your best to get past the first screener. Try to take it a far as you can go. Eat eat eat the time. This way some old grandma gets spared the fraud that will be inflicted because you just ate one slot of their time. Do people use social engineering attacks on these criminals?

Revision as of 23:49, 28 November 2018

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Cheers.—cyberbot IITalk to my owner:Online 14:48, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

The first robocall and fax-on-demand was created by John L Turcott of Kalamazoo Michigan back in the mid 70s using a Digital Development board and software combined with a PC Complete board.

At the time I was creating an automated talking classified named "Sell! Sell! Sell!" which ran 24/7/365 waiting for clients/customers to place and remove classified ads or have a fax sent to the client's modem at a specified time. The first problem I had after purchasing an IBM 8086 computer, fax/modems(1), PC Complete automated answering boards(4) and a board(1) from Digital Development was getting the software to work together. The software took me about 3 or 4 months of calling back and forth to a person by the name of Norm, at Digital Development, asking him to create various commands that were missing in their software. Once Norm/Digital Development's software was updated (on 360k floppies at the time, which I still have) I connected the PC Complete boards and had each answer calls and send out faxes based upon requests from the client(s) using unique filenames and times to call. Basically the boards would receive calls, allow the clients to place and remove ads and request fax which today sounds simple, but in those days it was revolutionary. The fax-on-demand was a totally new concept, but getting the word out was a job proven to be stepped on by big business(the power of newspapers and their press). I couldn't place ads in local papers or area shoppers/circulars because each, after talking with each other and their attorneys, would simply say "freedom of the press" and/or things like "take us to court." Sorry we can't allow you to place an ad for a competing business. They just didn't want a new concept to hurt their hundreds of years old paper's classifieds. Eventually I tried to hire an attorney but after having them make a few calls to the Kalamazoo Gazette and TDI (owners of all the local shoppers and circulars), I quickly realized I couldn't afford the attorney fees. So, along with Sell! Sell! Sell!, I gave up.

About a month or so later, I thought why not just have my boards make calls, play prerecorded messages introducing Sell! Sell! Sell! the talking classifieds? And so I added another board, requested more commands from Digital Equipment and finally "robocall" was created! Only problem was it cost $.08 per call and my first month's phone statement had a surprize for me. $850.00! In those days, that was a lot of money per month and along with my auto brokerage business, which I put on hold while I developed Sell! Sell! Sell!, I didn't have enough time, money or willpower to keep going.

My last days, just after I pulled the plug on Sell! Sell! Sell!, I received a call from Digital Development asking if we could meet to discuss Sell! Sell! Sell!, it's components, software and a possible working together arrangement. Now I know, this is where you think I made millions! Right? Well, not exactly. My auto brokerage business was also a new idea that I tried to franchise a few times, but found out if you don't own the land, you just lease or rent, the better you appear to do, the more the rent would grows! So over the course of the next year, I moved three times because my business seemed to be growing, profit not so much, but we looked busy! Then it happened, not only weren't the francize parties paying me, the location my brokerage was on was suddenly bought out from under me because my bank took over 6 months to review my loan request. So finally, under all the pressure and setbacks, I closed my auto brokerage, ran out of money, got a divorce and just gave up just about everything. My American Dream was DEAD. No millions, no rights to patents or any significant income and my life suddenly bottomed out. I even remember spending Christmas that year eating a polish hot dog at 7/11 which wouldn't have been all that bad, but I put way to much mustard on it so even the Christmas dinner didn't have a happy ending. So what's the moral, well, I guess there really isn't one other than patent your ideas, don't do as Shark Tanks often says "don't let anything get in your way!" Use your head, invest in what you believe in, but be honest with yourself, don't spend money you don't have, don't go out and borrow or hock everything you own, like I did, and seek advise from those that are interested in both you and your ideas.

Bragging rights: First fax-on-demand and robocall in the world! Suggestion rights: Don't bite off more than you can chew. Do what you are good at! Don't think you are good at everything! Protect your ideas, don't over commit, seek help and be candid about your product or idea(s) and your ability. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2601:406:301:ABD0:5CE0:7CF8:BCB2:1F0F (talk) 06:14, 8 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Include Robocall solutions section

I have written a section for the page about consumer solutions which combat robocalls. I suggest that it does not merit its own page, but could be placed after the Reverse robocalling section. I have taken into account the issue The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject. and it has been written from a more international perspective than the rest of the page.

Draft:Robocall solutions

--Gmseow (talk) 14:38, 13 December 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Gmseow This is great content. You provided information with citations to reliable sources. Are you feeling shy about posting this into the article? If you are, then I would copy/paste it for you, but you could be bold and do it. I support the addition of this content into the article. What can I do to help? Blue Rasberry (talk) 15:00, 13 December 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, include this content. Glrx (talk) 18:46, 19 December 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the positive feedback Bluerasberry and Glrx. Is there a way to move the draft article into the parent article as a new section, preserving the edit history (just for sake of completeness)? I had a look and couldn't find a way of doing it, but I'm guessing I've just missed it. Gmseow (talk) 11:39, 21 December 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Gmseow There is not a way to preserve edit history at the level of individual sections. Edit history is only kept for whole articles. There are some ways to combine entire article edit histories, but in this case, that would not apply.
The most apparent way forward in this case is to copy the "robocall solutions" draft into the main robocall article. This will result in a one-line edit being logged in the history of the main article.
In the future, you can do things the way you did this time, or if you like, make multiple edits directly into the main article as you are drafting whatever content you wish to share. Ask if you have questions. I expect you can manage the copy/paste but if you need assistance then I am here at your request. Blue Rasberry (talk) 14:23, 21 December 2016 (UTC)[reply]
No problem, I'll just paste it in. Thanks again Bluerasberry Gmseow (talk) 14:41, 21 December 2016 (UTC)[reply]
When you do the edit, the edit summary should include a wikilink to Draft:Robocall solutions to follow CC BY-. 16:25, 21 December 2016 (UTC)

Lenny chatbot

Can someone add a section about this? Thanks! --NaBUru38 (talk) 18:20, 23 November 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Another good way is to use fatigue techniques. If as many people as possible, try to get a human. Hit the digits or press 0. Try to sound interested and make up a fake name and fake info. Do your best to get past the first screener. Try to take it a far as you can go. Eat eat eat the time. This way some old grandma gets spared the fraud that will be inflicted because you just ate one slot of their time. Do people use social engineering attacks on these criminals?